Scientific English (3rd year undergrad course)

1. Choose the abstract of any paper in computer science and check whether they satisfy the assumptions of table 1 given in the lecture. Provide a detailed answer. You must submit a copy of the first page of the article you have chosen.

2. Choose any computer scientist of your liking and describe, as if writing an abstract, his/her biggest contribution to the ﬁeld.

Example of Answer to question (2) with A. Turing

Although references to thinking machines and artificial beings have appeared in history as early as in ancient Greece (Talos of Crete, bronze robot of Hephaestus), no rigorous definition for intelligence machines was known before that proposed by Alan Turing (1912-1954), known as the Turing test. That test has been proposed to test the ability of a machine to exhibit intelligent behaviour equivalent to that of a human being. To pass that test, a machine must be capable of engaging in a conversation with a human judge through a text-only channel in such a way that the human judge cannot reliably tell whether his interlocutor is a machine or not. Ever since it was proposed, this test has been both influential and criticized, making it one of the most fundamental concepts in the history of AI.